We were recently in Seattle, visiting one of our sons, and had dinner at Spinasse. Spinasse is known around Seattle as one of the best places to go for homemade pasta and it did not disappoint. There were a lot of moans and groans coming from our table. The meal was delicious, from the amuse that they brought out (a heavenly little bite of crostini with butter and anchovy) to an oustanding dessert of coconut gelato with dark chocolate flakes. But the real star of the show was, indeed, the pastas.

They make their own pasta, by hand, right in front of the diners and you can watch them, especially if you sit at the "cook's counter". Their signature pasta that they are most known for is Tajarin, a thin flat noodle that is common in the Piedmont region of Italy. They make their pasta only with egg yolks, just like they do in Piedmont, which makes a rich, silky pasta with a nice bite. They serve the Tajarin two ways - with either butter and sage or a meat ragu. We tried both at our table and they were so good. Their ragu especially got to me - it was a very finely ground ragu, which was great on such delicate pasta. Most ragus are on the chunkier side and just don't work well with such fine pasta - they slide right off. The ragu was also very concentrated, with almost no liquid. I wanted to try to recreate the dish myself.

I started with the usual recipe for ragu - a soffritto of onions, celery and carrot. But I tweaked some of the ingredients - I used tomato paste in addition to tomato sauce. I added a little nutmeg for a richer flavor. But the main thing I did that I really loved was after the sauce had cooked off most of the liquid, I transferred it to my food processor and finely ground it. I then returned it to the pot and added some ingredients again - some tomato puree, more wine, more broth - and the ragu just soaked it up so beautifully. And the step with the food processor was key - it really made the ragu fine enough that it really coated the fresh pasta nicely.

This recipe makes about 12 ounces of pasta, which should serve 4 people. The recipe makes more ragu than you will need for 12 ounces of pasta. You can either freeze the remainder (which I do - as long as I am making sauce, why not make more?) or you can easily halve this recipe.

Make the ragu:In a large heavy pot, brown the meats over medium heat. Drain the meats in a colander to remove fat. Do not wipe out pot. Add the onion, carrot, celery and olive oil to pot and saute on medium low heat for about 5 minutes. Add the garlic and saute a minute more. Add 3 Tablespoons of the tomato paste and let cook for a couple of minutes and then blend well. Add ½ cup of the wine, 2 cups of the beef broth, 1 cup of the pureed tomatoes, the oregano, nutmeg and pepper. Return the meat to the pot, stir well and cook, uncovered, over low heat so that the ragu simmers, but does not boil. Cook this way for about 1½ hours, stirrig occasionally.

Meanwhile, make the pasta:Place the egg yolks in a medium mixing bowl and whisk. If you have an electric mixer with a dough hook, do this step in that mixing bowl. Add half of the flour and, either with the dough hook or a fork, mix the flour into the eggs. Keep adding more flour until you get a dough that is still a bit sticky. Turn out onto a counter and finish by hand, adding a little more flour at a time and kneading until the dough is not too dry but still a tiny bit moist - it should feel like "Play-Doh". Wrap in floured plastic wrap and allow to sit for about 20 minutes.

After the dough has rested, cut it into 4 pieces and run through the rollers of a pasta machine, starting at the widest setting and ending at the next to thinnest setting (if you like a thicker pasta, just stop at the thickness you like). Lay the sheets out on a slightly floured counter. After you make all the sheets, either roll them up and slice by hand or run the sheets through the spaghetti cutter on your pasta machine. Place the pasta on a well floured rimmed baking sheet, toss with flour so the pasta doesn't stick, lightly cover with plastic wrap and keep in the fridge until ready to use.

Finish the ragu:After the ragu has cooked for about 1½ hours, most of the liquid should be gone. If not, simmer for 20 or so minutes more until this stage is reached. Either with an immersion blender in the pot, or in a food processor, process the ragu until the meats are finely ground. Return to pot and add the rest of the wine, beef broth, pureed tomato and tomato paste. The ragu should soak these right up. Taste the ragu and add salt to taste. Stir well and keep warm, with the lid on this time, until ready to use.

Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Cook the pasta for about 60 seconds, tossing with tongs as it cooks. Remove the pasta with tongs and place right in a large serving bowl, allowing some of the pasta water to cling to the pasta. Spoon some of the ragu over the pasta and toss well, coating the pasta. How much sauce you use is up to you - most Americans overdress pasta. Divide onto serving plates and serve with freshly grated Parmigiano cheese.

Reader Comments (5)

I would have been moaning and groaning right along with you. I would have been taking notes at the table as I was eating. Do you notice what kind of flour they used? I would have wanted to know if it was the "00" and if semolina was added to it. Your tajarin sounds delicious-- it will certainly be on the to do list. Grazie per la ricetta.

I made this last night. It was incredible. My toddler usually picks everything out of the sauce, meat bits, carrot etc and with the puree she couldn't and just ate it all. In fact we all ate it all, my man, myself and my toddler ate all the pasta! I know you said it was 4 servings but we couldn't help ourselves. One question. I used a hand crank pasta machine and it seemed to roll out ok but then when I ran it through to cut, it made very shallow cuts, requiring me to hand separate the pieces which was tedious. Am I doing something wrong? Thanks!

Last question. I made your pasta again last night as I've really enjoyed the task of rolling out the pasta dough. It's quite soothing. Last night I got some black flecks on the pasta dough when it rolled close to the edges. Any idea what this is? Is it dangerous? Edible? Thanks.